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GiR by GIR: Far Cry 4

I know it's been a while since the last review and for that I apologize. Between work and the holiday season kicking into full gear I haven't had much time to play games, let alone write about them. But I have returned to bring you my thoughts on Far Cry 4, aka Ubisoft's attempt to make you forget the abomination of a release that was Assassin's Creed: Unity.

Greetings from Kyrat readers! Wish you were here - but also not. That may sound confusing but hopefully I can
clear things up in short order. Let me start by saying Far Cry 4 is essentially
Far Cry 3 but refined to cut out what didn’t work, and expand upon what
did. Nestled in the Himalayas, the nation of Kyrat covers a truly impressive area and is loaded
down with everything you’d expect from the Far Cry franchise: radio/bell towers to climb, animals to hunt
and be hunted by, outposts and fortresses to clear, natives to help, and
collectibles to gather up.

This screen shot represents maybe 1/3 of the entire map, I couldn't actually zoom out far enough to get it all.

One of the first and most obvious improvements have been to
the plot and protagonist. Where many
players felt a jarring disconnect from Far Cry 3’s Jason BROdy (a.k.a. Xtream to the
MAXX White Boy adventurer whose main goal was to party as much as possible), Far
Cry 4 makes it much easier to slip into Ajay Ghale’s shoes. Ajay fled Kyrat’s civil war as a child with
his mother. His father was the founder of the rebel movement Golden Path and who
struggles against the land’s self-proclaimed dictator, Pagan Min. Ajay has returned to Kyrat to scatter the ashes of his
mother in the homeland which she loved and he’s presently estranged from. Unlike Jason on RookIsland,
Ajay has an authentic and more natural reason to be in Kyrat. This connection makes your
mission and goals feel that much more plausible and, thus, generally more engaging. Also setting Far Cry 4 apart from its predecessor are
the behaviors of the native inhabitants both among themselves as well as how they
treat Ajay. It’s refreshing to see that Ajay is self-aware enough
to recognize his outsider status, yet retains a genuine desire to help. Rather than put forth an arrogant attitude
of, “I’m here to fix the mess you ignorant savages have made of your country,”
Ajay seems to take a more humble approach, consulting with one of two Golden
Path leaders and offering to carry out their orders. This leads to one of Far Cry 4’s fun new
mechanics where, depending on who you support, the leadership and mission
structure of The Golden Path changes.

But it wouldn’t be a Far Cry if the game took itself too
seriously, and there certainly are more than enough opportunities to experience
wackier and over-the-top cinematic exploits in Kyrat, which can be found the
further you stray from the main story quests and which, frankly, I’d rather not spoil
here. Let’s just say it would not be
unreasonable to assume at some point one might: drive an ATV off a cliff to
jump into an airborne plane, ride a rampaging elephant into battle like Tony Jaa armed with a grenade launcher, or get into a fist fight with an eagle while
dangling precariously from a grappling hook line attached to a gyrocopter held
together mostly by duct tape and prayers. Oh yeah, did I not mention the gyrocopters? They're just one of dozens of new vehicles Far Cry 4
offers up to players along with airboats, Tuk Tuks, the usual assortment of
cars, jeeps, trucks, and elephants. The
only way Far Cry 4 could have been better in this aspect would have been by
letting players ride tigers too, though this may be a personal preference.

That said, beware. The wildlife is so deadly and filled with such hatred for all mankind I
would almost claim they are more dangerous than Pagan Min’s army. I know some reviews have claimed the combat
difficulty and enemy AI has been kicked up a notch as compared to FC3, but personally I think I’ve
died at least twice as often to eagles, rhinos, tigers, crocodiles, bears and honey badgers (yes you read that correctly), than I have to anyone with a
gun.

If you're wondering what happens when you try to kill a bear with a flamethrower, it just results in you getting burned AND mauled.

Between great game
play, gorgeous graphics, wonderfully immersive sound, and animation diversity
all bundled around familiar mechanics it's easy to say, "Wish You Were Here!," but now we get to the why you may not want to visit.

Far Cry 4
has changed up how it handles co-op play considerably. Instead of a stand alone mini campaign with
linear mission structure, you have to advance the Single Player game far enough
along in the story to invite a friend to simply drop into your world. Only the host gets
credit for completing open world quests and events. Loot, XP and Karma are shared
but that's about it for communal spoils. This wouldn't be such
a big issue for me if the actual process was more reliable. Aside form Ubisoft's terrible Uplay interface
not always functioning as it should, even once we were tearing
outposts up together we would run into hilarious but ultimately game-breaking bugs like
invisible vehicles, forced player teleportation, rubber-banding into lethal
situations (particularly with the knife animations; silent takedowns &
skinning), and missing player heads. While I know the forced teleportation isn't a strictly bug, it may as
well be. For example, at one point my
partner took off in a gyrocopter leaving me behind (I had missed my chance to
grapple aboard) and I soon got a prompt that I would be teleported if we didn't bring our PCs closer together. I had just finished
reading this when I was warped to my partner alright, directly UNDER the copter. As for the knifing examples I mentioned, in the first I
was skinning a fish and the animation dragged me out of the lake, but not up on
shore. The effect was such I was swimming through the rocky mountains of Kyrat until I 'swam'
too deep and feel through the bottom of the map and died. In the second, I performed
a silent take down on a guard only to fling him bodily to the Moon when the animation
finished up. Ultimately it depends on
your tolerance for that sort of thing. While its fun to laugh at the first few instances, it can quickly become tiresome when it prevents actual progress from occurring. It just seems like the co-op was never fully
tested, that Ubisoft bolted the feature on to say that the game had it and hoped
that the amusing nature of some of the glitches would be enough to keep the
angry gamers at bay.

Hurk threatens Ajay with a shotgun for making fun of his missing head.

There's also a competitive multiplayer called Battles of
Kyrat. It's an asymmetric mode where a team of Golden Path soldiers are
pitted against bow-toting Rakshasa warriors who are able to summon beasts and
turn invisible.I didn't play much of it and wasn't terribly impressed with the standard map types and
objectives.

Bottom line: I strongly recommend picking up Far Cry 4 if you've been considering it and
holding out. My co-op qualms aside, it's one of the few AAA titles
of the year I would say that is well worth it's current price tag of $60 USD. The single player alone is well worth it and,
as long as you can tolerate some bumps in the road for Co-Op, you'll certainly
find the game more chaotic and potentially hilarious with a partner.